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Text Identifier:"^every_day_hath_toil_and_trouble_every_he$"

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Every Day Hath Toil and Trouble

Appears in 34 hymnals Used With Tune: [Every day hath toil and trouble]

Tunes

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[Ev'ry day hath toil and trouble]

Appears in 3 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: W. T. Moore Incipit: 13536 53512 35213 Used With Text: Every Day Hath Trouble
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[Every day hath toil and trouble]

Appears in 521 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Beethoven Incipit: 33455 43211 23322 Used With Text: Every Day Hath Toil and Trouble

Instances

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Every Day Hath Toil and Trouble

Hymnal: Hours of Singing #47 (1882) Languages: English Tune Title: [Every day hath toil and trouble]
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Every Day Hath Trouble

Author: W. T. M. Hymnal: Crown of Beauty #245 (1902) First Line: Ev'ry day hath toil and trouble Languages: English Tune Title: [Ev'ry day hath toil and trouble]

Every day hath toil and trouble

Author: W. T. Moore Hymnal: Popular Hymns, revised #172 (1885) Languages: English Tune Title: PATIENCE

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

Ludwig van Beethoven

1770 - 1827 Person Name: Beethoven Composer of "[Every day hath toil and trouble]" in Hours of Singing A giant in the history of music, Ludwig van Beethoven (b. Bonn, Germany, 1770; d. Vienna, Austria, 1827) progressed from early musical promise to worldwide, lasting fame. By the age of fourteen he was an accomplished viola and organ player, but he became famous primarily because of his compositions, including nine symphonies, eleven overtures, thirty piano sonatas, sixteen string quartets, the Mass in C, and the Missa Solemnis. He wrote no music for congregational use, but various arrangers adapted some of his musical themes as hymn tunes; the most famous of these is ODE TO JOY from the Ninth Symphony. Although it would appear that the great calamity of Beethoven's life was his loss of hearing, which turned to total deafness during the last decade of his life, he composed his greatest works during this period. Bert Polman

William T. Moore

1832 - 1926 Person Name: W. T. M. Author of "Every Day Hath Trouble" in Crown of Beauty Moore, William Thomas. (Henry County, Kentucky, August 27, 1832--September 7, 1926, Orland, Florida) Disciple. A "cosmopolitan," he gained denominational fame for his liberal attitude toward the validity of non-immersionist forms of baptism during his tenure at minister of an independent congregation in London. Member of the five-man committee that produced the 1865 Christian Hymn Book (also appointed to a similar committee chosen to make the 1882 Christian Hymnal, Revised, but, being in London, was unable to serve); both books include his "Let every heart and tongue," "Listen to the gospel, telling," "Love of God, all love excelling," "O that I had wings like a dove," and "Thy kingdom, gracious Lord." He was the author of Comprehensive History of the Disciples of Christ (1909). --George Brandon, DNAH Archives

J. Bailey

Author of "Every Day Hath Trouble"
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